Yahoo Gifts Carnegie Mellon $10 Million to Create a Siri Crusher

Yahoo has given Carnegie Mellon researchers $10 million and access its real-time services, in hopes they’ll create the ultimate mobile assistant.

Yahoo wants a smarter Siri, and it’s hoping Carnegie Mellon University can help develop it.
Yahoo has made a $10 million grant to the university, which will conduct a five-year project on a mobile assistant solution that’s for now called InMind.
A highlight of the partnership is an "industry-first" mobile toolkit that will provide researchers at CMU with access to Yahoo’s real-time data services.
"This is, for both of us, a very big thing," Ron Brachman, chief scientist and head of Yahoo Labs said during a Feb. 12 press event on the CMU campus.

"We don’t like to do things small—you know the scale at which Yahoo operates. … We want to continue to do very big things together, very dramatic things, and not only provide great opportunities for students and faculty and our scientists and engineers, but for the consumers and advertisers who will eventually use future Yahoo products."

Tom Mitchell, the head of CMU’s Machine Learning department, explained the magnitude of the project during the event.
"We’re going to … cherry pick, across the entire university, the most relevant research in computer perception, how to make sense of microphone and camera signals, in learning how to do personalization, in human factors and design and interfaces in the Human-Computer Interactions Institute, for example," said Mitchell. "By pulling these together, we’ll be able to [create] a kind of prototype system, fielded on top of Yahoo’s infrastructure, and we’re going to … sign in opt-in users … to be living in this test bed. … This is unprecedented not just in [funding] but in the style of research we’re able to do."
Brachman told the MIT Technology Review that InMind will particularly focus on applications capable of engaging in simple conversation—a question, a response, a follow-up.
"This is missing from Siri," Brachman told the Journal, adding that while Siri has its benefits, it can’t understand the context in which a question is being asked.
Yahoo, with its deep reach into its users’ lives, can offer plenty of context.
"The data Yahoo has on its users, from the content of their emails to the records of their clicks on news articles could inform new apps with a deeper understanding of their users and the world they live it," reported the Journal, citing Justine Cassell, a Carnegie Mellon professor who will co-direct InMind with Mitchell.
Mitchell and Brachman have a shared history at the Defense Advance Research Projects Agency (DARPA) within the Pentagon, which funded a project called CALO, which created technology that ultimately resulted in Siri. (In mid 2012, as Microsoft was announcing that its next version of Windows Phone would include an answer to Siri, Google hired Regina Dugan, a former director at DARPA.)
Rumors have been ongoing, regarding Yahoo’s desire for a Siri crusher.
In December, Android Police posted a video of man driving and interacting with his phone—telling it to send a message to a colleague, saying he was running late and looking up restaurant information. The site later disclosed that the product wasn't made by Yahoo, as the footage stated, but was simply a "really nice concept demo" made by Robin Labs, a language-processing start-up.
"While we don't have further information about the app just yet," the site added, “it’s clear that Yahoo is working on what could be a formidable competitor to Google’s Search app.”